When is the last time a book that was relevant to Search Engine Marketing wasn't obsolete by the time it hit the printing press? For most of us, the appeal of SEM is its dynamic nature, a constantly changing environment with a relatively level playing field. This doesn't translate well to printed materials that take time to edit, review, print, and distribute. With the immediacy of breaking news, great SEM reporting and frequent blog posts, it's no wonder our feed readers have become our primary source of knowledge and information.
An often overlooked part of SEM is the "Marketing" part. Viewed in context, marketing on search engines is relatively young, but marketing in general has been around for centuries. Many of the principles that have been proven and refined over time can be applied to SEM, but you won't read about them in your daily dose of blog posts. For this, you might have to turn to the printed medium: books. Buy them, read them, think about them, and your business will benefit.
The Search by John Battelle, 2005
A great primer on search engine history and Google's rise to the top. Battelle covers a lot of ground and puts today's engines' vast capabilities in perspective when compared to earlier versions. Along the way, he dives into advertising and marketing opportunities within them and illustrates the game-changing technologies that made it all possible. Called "The Database of Intentions," Google is covered extensively from internal and external viewpoints through detailed interviews with the most powerful forces behind its success (and potential downfall). A must-read for anybody that wants to get a full dose of Search Engines 101.
Ambient Findability by Peter Morville, 2005
Despite the esoteric title, Morville's work covers the technologies, theories, and formulas behind modern "search engines." Going beyond just Google and Yahoo!, he relates all forms of search to "the convergence of information and connectivity" and details what can only be described as "universal search" long before we heard about it from Google. My one critique would be that he seems too comfortable with the notion that we have achieved a state of "unlimited findability," but I think we all realize that today's search engines are just the tip of the iceberg. This book is not explicitly about search engine marketing, but you will learn the fundamental principles that all search engines must obey, thus making you a more informed marketer. Knowing the possibilities and limitations of search engines is key to anticipating and taking advantage of future evolutions in search.
The Long Tail by Chris Anderson, 2006
The only book on this list that can be classified as a "marketing" book, even though it deals more with commerce and culture. By now we are all familiar with "The Long Tail" theory and have used it extensively in the field of search engine marketing. However, most of our non-search savvy clients and friends have not yet grasped the concept. Imagine the knowledge you can share by being the first to turn them on to this idea. Without reading the book, you may have missed his enlightened commentary on the future of many industries, including television, manufacturing, toys, software, and yes, search. The two basic secrets are "Make everything available" and "Help me find it," but there is so much more to it than that. Search marketers will benefit from learning how to explore and exploit the "infinite aisle."
Don't Make Me Think! by Steve Krug, 2006
Perhaps the craziest book title on the list, but this easy-to-read (and funny) guide to web usability will open your eyes to the way average people "really use the web." It's easy to forget how jaded SEMs are with our power searching operators and lightning-fast consumption of content. I offer this as a book to search marketers because search engine marketing doesn't end when a visitor clicks a link to come to your site. All your efforts will be wasted and your huge traffic counts will be nothing but lost if visitors can't find their way around a site. As an SEM, spend a little time improving your site and make your traffic work harder for you. Learn how to give users what they want, increase your conversion rates, and amplify your SEM efforts by converting more visitors to sales.
Call to Action by Bryan and Jeffrey Eisenberg, 2005
If I had my way, "Call to Action" would be renamed "Conversion University." The Eisenbergs masterfully cover complex subjects such as eye tracking, color selection, copy length, and interactivity, all with a focus on increasing conversion rates. Combining these theories with Krug's usability best practices would have a dramatic impact on nearly every company's online results. The beauty of this book is in its study of human behavior. Before reading this, I could have guessed that the color red implies "vitality, activity, desire, appetite, and craving," but I never would have guessed that yellow suggests, rather than stimulates, "a desire for change, that things are never quite at rest." Full of screenshots and diagrams, this book makes it easy to see the cause and effect of your choices when laying out a site or assisting a client with theirs. Either way, increasing conversions takes some of the pressure off of those tasked with increasing traffic at all costs.
Each of these books offers something different to a Search Engine Marketer; historical context, search theory, conversion optimization, and more. It's hard enough to find time to read all the blog posts each day, but spend some time reading these books and your business (and bottom line) will surely benefit.
Great list, ACM. I got a lot out of The Long Tail, Don't Make Me Think has an honored place on my bookshelf (as a usability specialist), and I'm currently reading The Search. That's a pretty good track record, so I'll definitely have to check out your other two recommendations.
I'd also add that I think marketers (or any student of human behavior) could get a lot out of The Tipping Point, another modern classic that really gets to the heart of social trends and how they happen.
Thanks Dr. Pete. I intentionally left out "The World is Flat", "The Tipping Point", "Blink", "Freakonomics", etc to avoid soundind like a NYT Top 10 list fanboy. But, I agree with your addition and would have included these 4 if I made this list a top 10.
I'm always looking to add a few more to the night stand. Any suggestions?
Yeah, I know; all of those are either on my or my wife's stack of books, and it is slightly embarrasing. I'm in the middle of The Universe in a Single Atom by the Dalai Lama, but I'm not sure about the relevance to search marketing :)
One that I did read recently but didn't get as much press is A Whole New Mind by Daniel Pink. It talks about how our economy is shifting from being dominated by "left-brain" activities (as a psychologist, that terms annoys me, but I don't have a better one) to "right-brain" activities, manifested especially by the increasing dominance of design and aesthetics in our work-life. It gets into implications for leisure, work, design, and outsourcing, and would be interesting to anyone who has a stake in the broader trends of the information economy.
Thanks for the A Whole New Mind suggestion. I'll add it to my list.
acm - this comment will teach me to read all comments, and not just the post before commenting myself. Apologies!
D'oh - I should have at least read the 1st comment before writing my own!
Sorry....
Hi guys, I am a long time reader and first time poster here. I really found all of these (well, the 3 I actually could find where i am from) books really interesting and usefull. I found another one that souds and looks promising "The Unusually Useful Web Book" by June Cohen and I was wandering if any of you guys have read it? Thoughts?
Welcome, thanks for the comment! I haven't heard of that one, but I checked it out on Amazon and it looks like it could be useful for a lot of people that are starting out on the web. Thanks for the suggestion.
ACM- A great list. Like Rand, the one book with which I was not at all familiar was Peter Morville's Ambient Findability. I loved your take on the basic theory of The Long Tail being explainable in 2 pages. This ties in with my basic theory about nonfiction books. I think of many as being very good articles which get plumped up into a book. In fact, I would guess that if you turned to dead center of the book in most non-fiction (particularly business-related) you can find the basic premise of the book and the corresponding kernel of truth upon which it was based.This holds true for me in Steve Krug's "The Trunk Test" chapter of Don't Make Me Think. His is the second most-frequently loaned book in our firm's lending library of books that we pass along to clients (and then need to replace).No.1 on that most-frequently loaned list: The Eisenbergs' Call to Action. I have to agree that it may sometimes lack the organizational aspect of similar books. We flagged the pages and highlighted text that we want clients to pay attention to giving those loaners a well-loved look.To finish, there are a couple books that I would love to add to the list. One is Bryan and Jeffrey Eisenberg's follow up - Waiting for your Cat to Bark. This is definitely a marketing-centric approach to using their personas concept to get people to take action while on your website. My favorite line - a re-writing of The Golden Rule; Rather than doing things as YOU would like to have them done, do things the way your CUSTOMER (website visitor) would like to have them done.Finally, I would ad Andrew Goodman's Winning Results with Google Adwords to my list. Although very much a hands-on mechanic approach to developing the ad side of the search function, I consider it a must-read because as we all realize we do NOT live in an organic results only search world. Whether or not you focus on Pay Per Click ads or not, your search results or those of your clients live in a symbiotic world with PPC. It behooves you to understand and control the message on "the right side."Side note shout-out to Jillian: Thanks for chiding me to put up my first ever post.
I completely agree with your take on business books, and I can imagine it's difficult to stretch a theory far enough to fill a couple hundred pages. But how much harder would it be to sell a business brochure? Magazine articles get pitched, blog posts are forgotten or skimmed and newspaper articles are reaching fewer people every day. Books still represent the best opportunity to convey and profit from a novel idea (pardon the pun).
I have heard of Waiting For Your Cat to Bark but not yet read it. I'll add that to the list as well. Thanks!
Good list, Kind of weird that there's a post on SEOmoz (albeit a guest post) about favorite books on the same day that Shoemoney posts a list of books that motivate him. Maybe we'll have a radio show debate about books now?
A debate sounds like a great idea.
Another one you may want to add to your list is "Why we buy: The Science Of Shopping" by Paco Underhill (https://www.amazon.com/Why-We-Buy-Science-Shopping/dp/0684849143)
"In an effort to determine why people buy, Paco Underhill and his detailed-oriented band of retail researchers have camped out in stores over the course of 20 years, dedicating their lives to the "science of shopping." Armed with an array of video equipment, store maps, and customer-profile sheets, Underhill and his consulting firm, Envirosell, have observed over 900 aspects of interaction between shopper and store..."
Even as search engine marketers, at the end of the day we're still targeting real human beings. Although "Why we buy" is focused on retail marketing specifically, many of the lessons and thought patterns it teaches can very easily be applied to the online world. I enjoyed it very much and found it applicable to my day to day work.
I've read these also. Call to Action is the best of the bunch in my opinion.
Another good book, although quite old, is Tested Advertsing Methods. Great stuff about writing good sales copy.
Most of it is speaking towards direct mail, but you can easily apply it to writing headlines, PPC ads, etc.
Fantastic List. I enjoyed reading every one. I find that if I go back and read the older marketing books, you know the ones that pre-date the internet boom, there is wealth of wisdom to be gleaned. Such classic books as Social marketing : strategies for changing public behavior / Philip Kotler, Eduardo L. Roberto. 1989, Making niche marketing work : how to grow bigger by acting smaller / Robert E. Linneman, John L. Stanton, Jr. 1991, and The 22 immutable laws of marketing : violate them at your own risk / Al Ries and Jack Trout. 1993 are all great examples of good marketing books. I am not advocating not reading the new and up-to-date books they are valuable and actually more relevant to what we are doing now. As search marketers we have the tendency to think that we were the ones who invented marketing. Marketing is actually older than the internet. We must pay homage to our roots and understand that the internet is just a tool for us to use to do our job of marketing. Even as a specialist it is important to take care of the fundamentals. If we do keep in mind we are marketers first and on the internet practicing our craft second, we will all be better Search Engine Marketers.
Very good advice. I grew up with a career "ad man" for a father and I wouldn't trade the traditional "pre-internet" marketing background for anything. Selling is selling, whether it's online or face-to-face. It all comes down to building relationships and making sure the customer has the information they need to make a well-educated decision.
Maybe I'll write my own book...a few universal truths can be re-packaged any number of ways. ;)
If you're interested in analytics at all, I'd suggest you take a look at 'Web Analytics: An Hour A Day'.
I've read about half to 2/3rds so far and learnt a lot!
that's a great book adam, i keep it close by on my bookshelf. lots of good stuff.
I agree. I'm going to order a few of the other books mentioned, but Web Analytics on an hour a day is an amazing read. I picked up a lot of useful information and highly recommend it.
Prioritizing Usability was a great book for me. I have bought one for all my coworkers.
Thanks for the cool list.
I second this, definitely a must have book to add to everyone's ever growing collection of ebusiness related books
I just ordered Call To Action and The Long Tail. Both sound like extremely helpful reads. Thanks for the post.
Always good to get lists tike these, it help new people getting into the industry. I’ve read “The Search” and I haven’t started on “The Long Tail” yet. This gives me a good reason to read it and get the rest of the list.
Nice books for search marketer; I have "The Search" & "The Long Tail". Now I will buy rest above book, please always share this kind of list. Thanks again.
Really good post - I'm off to check out Ambient Findability - that hadn't been on my radar yet :)
Thanks! I knew I should have made the book titles affiliate links to Amazon.com....could have been a profitable post too. Speaking of Amazon, between buying these titles and books for my wife's dental practice, I get some weird recommendations. Apparently they think I need to go on a diet.
OK, already- since everyone is hawking methods for buying the books, I thought I'd pile on with Steve Krug's (Don't Make Me Think) own request on his website-- "If you’re going to buy the book online, please buy it from this page" By the way, if I'm not supposed to do this please moderate the link out and I apologize, I just started my membership.
That said, most of the posts agree that Mr. Krug is THE MAN. His site, sensible.com also has a sample chapter of the book that gives a flavor of his wit and wisdom.
I'm going to start with The Long Tail by Chris Anderson. Can't wait. Thanks for the selection. I'm a pseudo-SEO, and I keep hearing about the 'long tail.' Didn't know it was a book.
Maybe SEOmoz should add a monthly online discussion called 'SEO Book of the Month.'
Great list of books that, especially that of "Call to Action" as that is really where the rubber meets the road!
I'm only missing "Don't Make Me Think". My "Call To Action" cover looks very different. I think it is the second edition.
I ordered "Ambient Findability" Yesterday, per your recommendation. Let me go and order "Don't Make Me Think". I love reading.
Yes, I have the 1st edition of Call to Action. Hopefully not much has changed in less than 2 years.
Very good post. I would also add the Clue Train Manifesto to your list. Cheers.
I thought I'd come up with a list of books that I've read that have been useful, but not necessarily anything that's any ones that have been suggested yet.
Anne Lamott, "Bird By Bird - Some Reflections on Writing and Life". Some great stuff in here about the process of writing, including essential encouragement to use a "shitty first draft" to get something you are working on out of your head and onto paper so you can start to deal with it.
David Weinberger, "Everything is Miscellaneous". If you have every tried to make sense of some tidy organized pile of information and then find it impossible to get people to make the same sense of it that you have this provides an appropriate philosphical perspective.
Brown and Duguid, "The Social Life of Information" - understanding the human social network behind people's information seeking behavior.
Alex Osborn, "Your Creative Power". This is the book your dad would have read if he was in the ad business.
I have to say that when I have read this post I have been very proud of the choice of my readings because I have read 4 out of the 5 suggested books; ambient findabilty by Morville is the only one I haven't read yet, even if the Architecture Information's author is one the corner stones you can't miss it. In my humble opinion don't make me think and "Call to Action" are absolutely must read books, especially the latter one. It explains clearly why the online site persuasion, copywriting and optimization is so important; it's time and money waste if you invest money in attracting visitors to your website if then they are non doing what you wish they 'd do on your site.. your site should become your slot-making money machine... the Eisemberg's say..all over the world..
Thank you for compiling this, I'm a self-confessed book junkie and due to the awesomeness that is Amazon, I already have 3 of the 5 books in my collection. I guess this means it's time to read the other two... Gotta catch'em all!
PS. Quick tip for other Aussies; buying these books in bulk and ordering off Amazon is cheaper (even after shipping) than purchasing domestically.
$AUD1.00 = $US0.88
No problem. I've got some more ideas for another round of reviews, just have to find the time to read them all. Any suggestions? What are Aussie SEOs reading these days?
Haha, I was going to take a page from your book (so to speak) and write a follow-up entry on 5 more books that search marketers should definitely read. 2 of them have already been mentioned in the comments here but the other books are not really search or even online specific - nonetheless I think they will be valuable reading for those interested in rounding out their marketing skillset!
Maybe Rand should start a SEOmoz book club :P
Bring it on. Share the wealth. Anything to continue the conversation and inform the rest of us.
I've read 3 out of the 5 - The Search, Don't Make Me Think, and Call to Action. I keep them by my desk at all times. I'll pick up the other two on Amazon soon. Thanks for the suggestions.
Hey, just a little plug here.
All these books are avilable on AbeBooks.com for less than 15$. "The Search" can be found for only $1.20 and "Call to Action" is as low as $3.00 currently.
Thanks PirANhA for the information. I want to start reading those books. But sh**t I'm in "Paradise" Costa Rica, I don't know if they ship down here, I'll check on it.
acm.miller thanks for the valuable information and for giving me more to read as if I didn't have enough. Not seriously great article.
Thanks SEO Practices. It's tough to find time to read this amount of stuff, but even 30-45 minutes a day will get you through these books at about the rate of 1 per 7-10 days. Time well spent if you ask me. Let me know if you can't get them to ship to you down there. I'm sure we can work something out.
Thanks acm.miller, I really apprectiate it. I will sure let you know. Keep up the good work.
Oddly enough I just bought "Don't Make Me Think" earlier today, prior to reading here. I think I've heard what's in it so many times, but I decided it was time to finally read the original.
Thats a very nice list, let me see which of these books i can grab and read asap.
Maybe it is just me but I found Call to Action to be a really poorly written and organized book. It didn't have any flow to it and it seemed like a bunch of old blog posts thrown together in hard cover.
On another note, I would suggest Good to Great as a book for anyone who is running their own business. The principles in that book apply to business of any size and is worth the read.
I got a copy from Bryan & Jeffrey and while I agree that the organizatino of the book is fairly unique, I still found a lot of good tips and advice. Some of it was just phrasing things in a way that clients can better relate to - a valuable asset on its own.
The organization could have been better and it annoyed me that some of it repeated their online copywriting book (I read them back to back), but it's still got a lot of great ideas and really opened my eyes to conversions.
That's a brilliant list and an equally good list of trailing comments.
I have always claimed not to enjoy reading as I haven't read a novel in years and never seem to be able to get through them due to an overall lack of interest - but to contradict myself, I read a dozen blog posts a day and love keeping-up with online news.
Now I'm starting to realise that the issue was never to do with reading, but simply not finding books that stimulated me enough.
Hopefully your list and the books listed by everyone who commented I'll be able to increase my limited marketing knowledge and actually finish reading a book that isn't prefixed by the letter "e".
I would warn against limiting your reading to business books only. You'll end up bored and burnt out after a few. I recommend throwing in a leisure book here and there. Even with leisure reading I tend to stick to non-fiction but anything will do.
I recommend anything by David Sedaris (Me Talk Pretty One Day, Dress Your Family in Courdoroy and Denim, etc) or Bill Bryson (A Walk in the Woods, A Short History of Nearly Everything). All very funny and will have you nodding in agreement.
acm-
I have made it a habit to stay enchanted in books of the past, but a friend of mine just gave me Naked because he said the main character reminded him of me (I take it as a compliment) and I think it is absolutely enjoyable.
Good insight about throwing your mind a curve by mixing business and leisure.
Thanks for the advice - if those books are as interesting as their titles, I'm sure they'll be good.
Unfortunately, someone took my "don't make me think" book, and lost it... good call on the "call to action" book, great list of resources
One I recently got turned onto:
Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die
I highly recommend Ambient Findability, and, as others have mentioned 'Web Anaytics an Hour a Day' is great as well.
Don't Make Me Think is a must read and a classic.
A few others that help you in building your site are 'Prioritizing Web Usability' and 'The Design of Sites' - both in depth discussions on the small details of every site.
Really timely post for me as I'm (sort of) thinking about writing a book and have been doing some research.
So I finally got round to reading the Long Tail rather than just listening to people talk about it; and you know what? Whilst the theory obviously still holds trrue, I was slightly disappointed in the rest of the book. Once he'd used up the serious data he got from Netflix etc.. it was just a bit of a hymn to the web. Lots of ideas but no solutions - is that fair?
To this excellent list I would add some other non-search books, but ones which deal with other aspects of our work. So maybe The Tipping Point, which feeds into viral marketing.
Nice post!
In all honesty I think The Long Tail theory itself could have been thoroughly covered in about 2 pages, including the NetFlix example. But chapter 5: "The New Producers" (not Matthew Broderick and Nathan Lane) is the second most valuable chapter. The tools of production and distribution are now in the hands of the masses which definitely adds to the theory's complexity and benefits the SEM.
The first 1/3 of the book is definitely a lot more interesting than the rest (he sort of hammers the idea to death), but it's such a fascinating idea that I still found it worth the read. Since the idea has been re-explained badly so many times by others, I was glad I went back to the source.
Oh yeah - it was a good read by the pool and I'm sure it made a great article; but a whole book? Now the Tipping Point = there's a whole book's worth.
Just started the Wisdom of Crowds, and that promises to be satisfying....
Not to dampen your enthusiasm, but I honestly thought Wisdom of Crowds suffered from a bit of the same problem as The Long Tail. It's a great concept, and the book starts strong, but it loses steam after a while. One of the things that I really loved about The Tipping Point was just how well all of the examples flowed together and told a story. Every chapter of that book is fascinating, IMO.
Damn you - that is like the cab driver who takes the tourist to see the Mouse Trap, gets a bad tip and shouts out "It was the butler" as they walk off!
:)
Oh well, hopefully The Cluetrain Manifesto will live up to expectations when I finally get a copy...
PS - my English probably seems stiled as I can not get the apostrophe button to work on my new Mac!
Sorry, buddy. Have I told you about that last page of Harry Potter I downloaded off the internet? ;)
You need to be careful with Harry Potter & the internet; you might end up with the adult version!
;)
This is a great book: www.punkmarketing.com. Well written with a great sense on humour too.
Long tail is a great book. I'd also recommend Purple Cow and Big Red Fez by Seth Godin as well. Easy reads but with some amazing straight forwad advice.
Once tried Clue Train Manifesto. Got totally lost and learnt nothing.
Oh and anything by Tom Peters - Genius!
Steve Krug's Don't Make Me Think! should be required reading for anyone working on Web site UI design. It's a relatively easy (and even entertaining) read, loaded with lots of potential "duh" moments for anyone who wants to design any sort of Web site to be used by actual people.